Vogl-Lukasser and Vogl Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine (2018) 14:63 https://doi.org/10.1186/s13002-018-0262-3 RESEARCH Open Access The changing face of farmers’ home gardens: a diachronic analysis from Sillian (Eastern Tyrol, Austria) Brigitte Vogl-Lukasser and Christian R. Vogl* Abstract Background: Home gardens are an integral part of many traditional land use systems around the world. They are subject to various conversion processes and undergo a variety of changes. We were interested if change is an ongoing process in farmers’ home gardens of Eastern Tyrol (Austria). Methods: In Sillian, 16 farmers’ home gardens (FHGs) were studied. They had been studied in 1998 and were revisited in 2013 including again a botanical inventory of cultivated and non-cultivated plants, and structured interviews on appearance, management and plant use. In 2017, all the 16 gardens were visited again to verify whether any visible change on spatial configuration had occurred. Results: The home garden size had decreased between 1998 and 2013. A wider range of sizes was observed. The occurrence of plant taxa per garden was the same but an increase in the standard deviation of occurrence is seen. Plant diversity (occ./m2) increased between 1998 and 2013. Seventy-nine plant taxa were no longer cultivated in 2013, but 95 new plant taxa were being cultivated. The correlation between garden size and occurrence was not significant, i.e. small gardens might host many different plant taxa or large gardens might have fewer plant taxa. The occurrence for certain use categories was not significantly different between the years, except for the increase in the occurrence of plant taxa used as food and the food subcategory spice. The mean abundance of individuals for all plant taxa showed a significant decrease between the years. In 2013, an increase in standard deviation of abundance is seen. The variation in the different use categories expressed in abundance between the years was not significantly different, except for the decrease in the abundance of plant taxa used as food. Between 1998 and 2017, six home gardens showed a change of their spatial configuration (replacement by raised beds; merging with other structures; conversion to lawn). One FHG shows signs of abandonment. Conclusions: In Sillian, gardens are by no way static agroecological units, but are dynamic and individual in their appearance, composition and function. Farmers’ home gardens in Sillian show a trend towards becoming more individual, i.e. conversion from being a product of a homogenous local cultural script of the community into an area where gardeners define more individually the role that farmers’ homegardens are expected to play for them or their family. Keywords: Gardening, Garden, Subsistence, Ethnobotany, Agrobiodiversity, Land use change, Transition, Sustainability, Alps, Mountain farming, Agroecology, Homegarden * Correspondence: [email protected] Division of Organic Farming, Department for Sustainable Agricultural Systems, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Gregor-Mendel-Straße 33, 1180 Vienna, Austria © The Author(s). 2018 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated. Vogl-Lukasser and Vogl Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine (2018) 14:63 Page 2 of 20 Background function of FHGs in Sillian (Eastern Tyrol) between Home gardens are an integral part of many traditional 1998 and 2013. Furthermore, data from 2017 were also land use systems around the world [1–5]. In Europe, studied to identify whether FHGs continued to be pro- traditional land use systems focusing on subsistence and duction systems. the local exchange of produce have seen dramatic changes in recent decades as a result of various socio-economic Methods transformations that are also perceived to be a threat to Study area the continuation of diversified agroecosystems [6–9]. The district of Lienz (Eastern Tyrol) is located in the The second half of the twentieth century is often iden- Austrian part of the Eastern Alps. The large altitudinal tified as the period in which agriculture shifted from a gradient from 600 m to almost 4000 m above sea level “traditional”, subsistence-oriented agrarian mode of pro- gives rise to a narrow sequence of different natural and duction to a “modern”, commercially oriented one [10–12]. agricultural zones. Annual precipitation in the region is In Eastern Tyrol, that period saw the abandonment of 826–1354 mm, and the mean annual temperature is arable subsistence farming (e.g. the production of rye 2.8–6.9 °C (values depend on exposure and altitude). This and wheat) in the mountainous parts of the region and broad range of natural conditions within a small area has many labour-intensive manually operated subsistence led to a highly diverse pattern of human-environment re- practices (e.g. the gathering of wild plants for food/medi- lationships [32]. Adaptive management of natural re- cinal purposes [13, 14]), as was the case in other parts of sources by Alpine small farmers has created a typically Europe as well [11, 15]. Decisions were taken in Eastern diverse and multifunctional landscape. The historical form Tyrol to specialise in grassland with higher livestock of agriculture in this region can be described as “mountain productivity and a strong focus on national and inter- cereal grazing” [33] in which the farming of arable land national markets [11, 16]. (up to 1700 m a.s.l.) for cereal cultivation, field vegetables, There have also been changes in farmers’ home gar- fibre crops, etc. and the farming of a wide range of domes- dens (FHGs) in Eastern Tyrol. Until the 1960s, FHGs ticated animals, with a low number of individuals per spe- were small, fenced, horticulturally managed plots with cies, were the main components of the subsistence system limited plant diversity focusing on medicinal use and until the 1960s [13, 17, 34]. Large parts of today’s mead- spices. In 1998, these FHGs had increased in their diver- owlands used to be tilled up to an altitude of 1700 m. sity, size and importance for subsistence, with some Farming systems in Eastern Tyrol have undergone change plant taxa even entering the garden from fields in dis- in the past few decades. The cultivation of cereals, fibre tinct environments [17, 18], as also observed for ex- crops and field vegetables (e.g. Pisum sativum L., Vicia ample by Coomes and Ban [19], showing that FHGs are faba L., Brassica rapa L. ssp. rapa) has declined in the last a dynamic system [17, 20]. Indeed, home gardens are three decades due to unfavourable economic conditions not only recognised worldwide as multi-purpose, eco- and the need for high labour inputs. The agricultural focus logical and socially sustainable systems [1–3, 21], but of mountain farms today is on grasslands, with the cul- also as exhibiting changes over time in line with the tural landscape dominated by meadowland in lower zones, needs and views of those managing these agroecosys- where hay is produced for winter fodder, and by pasture- tems [2, 17, 22]. land in the higher alpine zones, where cattle remain As dynamic systems, home gardens are subject to vari- throughout the summer. The economy of the majority of ous conversion processes worldwide and undergo a var- mountain farms in Eastern Tyrol is based on cattle breed- iety of changes—garden modernisation does not occur ing, milk production and timber harvesting for cash in- uniformly [23]—with regard to plant diversity, functional come. Some farmers offer beds to tourists and/or process diversity, structural diversity, knowledge and resource milk, meat and other products from the farm. For their inputs for example [17, 24–27]. Changing cultural own consumption, some farmers diversify their basic ac- values, socio-economic, demographic, political and cli- tivities by also keeping sheep, goats, pigs, chicken or bees, matic conditions, plus technical and infrastructural de- and/or growing fruit, herbs and vegetables (e.g. potatoes). velopment—among other variables—are mentioned as Farming is combined with different kinds of off-farm underlying driving forces of this [2, 17, 25, 28–30]. labour, with federal subsidies playing an important role in The collection of data at different time periods could farm income [13]. open up new perspectives for understanding the dynam- The village of Sillian, one of the 33 villages in Eastern ics of the home garden system [3, 25, 31]. FHGs in East- Tyrol, is situated at 1100 m.a.s.l. (village centre) in the ern Tyrol were studied in 1998 with regard to their Pustertal valley in the western part of the district of dynamics from the 1960s to their status in 1998. The Lienz. The village includes various hamlets, such as present study analysed the dynamics of the management, Sillian Berg and Arnbach, and has a population of structure, plant use (occurrence and abundance) and 2044 in total. In this village, 124 farms manage a total Vogl-Lukasser and Vogl Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine (2018) 14:63 Page 3 of 20 of 2964 ha, an area that is constantly declining in In 1998 and 2013, a botanical inventory of cultivated parallel with a decreasing number of farmers working and non-cultivated, i.e. spontaneously reproducing the land [35–39]. plants [41], was undertaken. In 1998 this was done dur- ing three visits in the growing season in early May, July Data collection and analysis and October, while in 2013 the inventory was con- Farmers’ home gardens, according to the local percep- ducted in midsummer (July).
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